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Salmon lice – impact on wild salmonids and salmon aquaculture

O Torrissen1,2, S Jones3, F Asche4, A Guttormsen5, O T Skilbrei6, F Nilsen7, T E Hors- berg8and D Jackson9

1 Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway

2 Faculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture, University of Nordland, Bodø, Norway

3 Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada 4 Department of Industrial Economics, University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway

5 UMB School of Economics and Business, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, A˚s, Norway 6 Department of Population Genetics and Ecology, Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway 7 Department of Biology, Sea Lice Research Centre, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway

8 Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Norwegian School of Veterinary Science, Oslo, Norway 9 Marine Institute, Galway, Ireland

Abstract

Salmon lice, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, are naturally occurring parasites of salmon in sea water. Inten- sive salmon farming provides better conditions for parasite growth and transmission compared with natural conditions, creating problems for both the salmon farming industry and, under certain condi- tions, wild salmonids. Salmon lice originating from farms negatively impact wild stocks of salmonids, although the extent of the impact is a matter of debate. Estimates from Ireland and Norway indicate an odds ratio of 1.1:1-1.2:1 for sea lice treated Atlantic salmon smolt to survive sea migration compared to untreated smolts. This is considered to have a moderate population regu- latory effect. The development of resistance against drugs most commonly used to treat sal- mon lice is a serious concern for both wild and farmed fish. Several large initiatives have been taken to encourage the development of new strate- gies, such as vaccines and novel drugs, for the treatment or removal of salmon lice from farmed

fish. The newly sequenced salmon louse genome will be an important tool in this work. The use of cleaner fish has emerged as a robust method for controlling salmon lice, and aquaculture produc- tion of wrasse is important towards this aim. Sal- mon lice have large economic consequences for the salmon industry, both as direct costs for the prevention and treatment, but also indirectly through negative public opinion.

Keywords: aquaculture, Atlantic salmon, Lepeopht- heirus salmonis, management, Pacific salmon, socio-economic impact.

Introduction

The Danish–Norwegian bishop, Erik L. Pontoppi- dan (1698–1764), was probably the first to describe the salmon louse in print by his descrip- tion of ‘great schools of salmon moving from the sea into fresh water, partly to refresh themselves, and partly to rid themselves by rubbing and wash- ing in the swift currents and waterfalls, of a kind of greenish vermin called ‘Laxe-Luus,’ attached between the fins, plaguing it in the heat of spring’

(Berland & Margolis 1983). Bishop Pontoppidan’s report suggests that salmon lice were abundant on

CorrespondenceO Torrissen, Institute of Marine Research, P.O. Box 1870 Nordnes, N-5817 Bergen, Norway

(e-mail: olet@imr.no)

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Atlantic salmon around 1750 in sufficient quanti- ties to induce signs of discomfort or wounds and that ‘salmon louse’ was a commonly used name for the parasite. A report in 1940 from the Moser River (Nova Scotia, Canada) describes severe sal- mon louse infections and associated deaths: ‘fish, which were apparently freshly ascended from the estuary, carried hundreds of lice … some of the grilse had an almost complete layer of lice extend- ing from the posterior edge of the eyes to the cau- dal peduncle on the dorsal part of the body with also a few lice around the anal and pelvic fins’

(White 1940). These accounts suggest a substantial annual variation in salmon louse infection rates.

Salmon lice on Atlantic salmon caught in rivers were once considered a sign of prime quality as this indicated that the fish only recently entered the river and had not yet suffered the decline in quality associated with sexual maturation. The ini- tial scientific interest in salmon lice was low, how- ever, with the publication of only a few reports until salmon lice began to cause problems for the aquaculture production of Atlantic salmon (Bran- dal, Egidius & Romslo 1976; Brandal & Egidius 1977; Johannessen 1978).

Aquaculture production of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar L., reached approximately 1.5 million tons in 2009, with Norway being the largest pro- ducer, followed by Chile, the United Kingdom and Canada (Torrissen et al. 2011). Wild stocks of Atlantic salmon declined during the same per- iod (Anon 2011; NASCO 2011), and the nomi- nal catch in 2010 was 1589 tons or approximately 0.1% of the total landings of wild and cultured Atlantic salmon (Fig. 1). In general, sea pen cul- ture of salmon has greatly increased our knowl- edge of marine pathogens (Bakke & Harris 1998).

The salmon louse has been a serious problem for the Atlantic salmon farming industry since the 1970s (Brandal et al. 1976; Brandal & Egidius 1977), and the salmon louse has a greater eco- nomic impact than any other parasite (Costello et al. 2004). The year-round high density of hosts provides the ideal conditions for salmon lice. Not surprisingly, within a few years of the onset of intensive salmon aquaculture, salmon farms were proposed to be the primary sources of salmon louse epizootics on wild sea trout in Ireland (Tully

& Whelan 1993).

The apparent inverse relationship between the Atlantic salmon aquaculture production and the catch or abundance of wild salmon has led to

discussions and conflicts between the salmon farm- ing industry and society, often represented by dif- ferent non-governmental organizations (NGO).

The core of the conflicts has been disagreement on the scale of the impact of salmon lice or their thera- peutants on the decline of wild salmon populations or non-targeted species (http://www.worldwildlife.

org; www.puresalmon.org; www.mangroveaction- project.org; www.farmedanddangerous.org). In this respect, there is a common failure to recognize that a correlation between the two sets of data does not necessarily indicate a cause–effect relationship (McVicar 2004). The current controversy arises partly from a lack of good data, leading to over- interpretation and possibly misinterpretation of the available information (McVicar 2004).

Aquaculture production of salmonids in open- cage systems will probably always be challenged by salmon lice and, as with many other diseases in farmed animals and humans, the management of salmon lice infestations will remain an ongoing battle. In this battle, the farming industry will pursue multiple strategies to control salmon lice infestation rates to acceptable levels and the para- site will demonstrate a capacity to adapt to these efforts. The 9th International Symposium on Sea Lice was held in Bergen Norway in May 2012.

The intention of this article is to summarize the current knowledge of salmon louse biology, including the epidemiology, host interaction and impact on wild fish, as well as advances in the treatment, control and management of salmon lice. We also discuss salmon lice from a social and economic perspective.

0 50 100 150 200 250

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020

% of average (1960-2010)

Non-farming countries Norway, Scotland, Ireland, Canada Norway

Figure 1 Relative nominal catch of Atlantic salmon from 1960 to 2010 in ‘non-farming countries’ (USA, Russia, Ice- land, Sweden, Denmark, The Faeroe Islands, Greenland the UKexcept Scotland, France and Spain), ‘Norway, Scotland, Ireland and Canada’, and ‘Norway’(NASCO 2011). The Faroe Islands is included among ‘non-farming’ as their salmon fishery is a marine fishery.

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Socio-economic considerations

The main social impact of salmon is to create jobs and livelihood. Aquaculture is the largest activity in this respect, but the recreational and commer- cial wild fisheries are also substantial. Negative impacts on wild salmon stocks from farming activities are perceived to reduce wild catches for anglers and decrease the demand for fishing li- cences (Olaussen & Liu 2011). While fish farms may displace fishermen from their traditional har- vesting grounds, farming may also lead to local increases in catches as wild fish forage on waste feed available near farms. Salmon aquaculture also provides an indirect livelihood for a number of people, such as suppliers, administrators and pro- cessors. Olavsen et al. (2011) estimate that the number of people employed in aquaculture-related jobs is twice that of people directly involved in the aquaculture core operation. The recent loss of more than 20 000 jobs in salmon farming and processing as a result of infectious salmon anaemia and salmon lice in Chile provides a dramatic example of the importance of disease and parasite management (Alvial et al.2011).

The salmon lice issue receives attention partly because of the potential spread of lice from farmed to wild salmon and partly because of interactions between farms. It is necessary to distinguish between the costs to individual farms associated with salmon louse infestation and the social costs of salmon lice discharged from those farms. Costs to individual farms include those associated with lost production due to disease or fallowing and with treatment. Costs associated with salmon lice that impinge other farms or the broader ecosystem include higher production costs for other farms due to elevated infestations or reduced catches of wild salmon due to increased mortality of wild sal- mon stocks (Asche, Guttormsen & Tveteras 1999).

Farm-specific costs due to salmon lice are rela- tively well understood. A farm will normally treat against sea lice when production costs are increased due to a reduced growth rate, increased feed conversion rate and reduced marketability due to skin injuries at a levels exceeding the treat- ment costs. For the 2006 global production of Atlantic salmon (1.6 million tons), it is estimated that lice treatment cost the industry approximately 305 million €(Costello 2009).

The influence of salmon lice on production costs at one farm tends to influence several farms

in a region (Tveteras 2002). For the industry in the region, this provides a justification for regula- tions to limit this negative externality.

Criticism of the salmon farming industry for how they have handled the salmon louse problem has influenced the design of regulations and licences to operate. For example in Norway, con- cerns with respect to salmon lice led to a post- poned implementation and possibly abandonment of an increase in the maximum allowable biomass (MAB) (Asche & Bjørndal 2011). The strong negative publicity on the sea lice issue may also influence the public reputation of salmon and the salmon industry, reducing the demand and conse- quently the price for salmon. As there is a global market for salmon (Asche et al. 2005), however, this effect is most likely limited.

A thorough bioeconomic model that accounts for the externalities caused by neighbourhood farms and regulations is required to fully deter- mine the cost of salmon lice. Limited knowledge is available regarding the level of this cost, but it is likely to vary substantially between farms and regions. For the economic sustainability of sal- mon farming, it is important that regulatory measures are evaluated with respect to the eco- nomic as well as environmental impact. In gen- eral, regulatory design and the compatibility of regulatory measures with fish farmers′ incentives will significantly influence costs incurred by the regulations as well as the effectiveness of the reg- ulations. Regional bioeconomic models may best evaluate the economic impacts of different regula- tory measures.

On the basis of production growth and employ- ment, salmon aquaculture is a success story. Inno- vations that enhance productivity and improve competitiveness are the main factors behind the growth (Guttormsen 2002; Asche 2008). How- ever, salmon aquaculture has the potential to cause negative externalities both by excessive use of resources in the surrounding ecosystem and through interactions with wild stocks as exempli- fied by salmon lice. Hence, regulations and good governance are necessary to establish a sustainable industry (Smith et al. 2010). Regulations, how- ever, directly influence the competitiveness of an industry, and thus, regulatory design is very important for the economic and societal sustain- ability of the industry. For example, regulations have eroded the competitiveness of the salmon production industries in Canada and Scotland

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(Asche & Bjørndal 2011). Hence, if salmon aqua- culture is to be sustainable, the lice challenge must be addressed with cost-efficient measures that allow firms and societies to continue to thrive with the industry.

General biology

The salmon louse, Lepeophtheirus salmonis, has a circumpolar distribution in the Northern Hemi- sphere (Kabata 1979) and is principally a parasite of salmonids in the genera Salmo, Oncorhynchus and Salvelinus. Atlantic salmon post-smolts leave coastal waters quickly after migration from the rivers and are unlikely to represent a significant source of salmon louse larvae in coastal waters (Butler 2002). Prior to salmon aquaculture opera- tions, the year-round presence of sea trout, Salmo trutta L., in coastal waters probably supported a local over-wintering population of salmon lice (Butler 2002; Rikardsen 2004). Returning Atlantic salmon are a significant source of lice with a nearly 100% prevalence, and the louse population comprises predominantly ovigerous females (Cop- ley et al. 2005; Jackson et al. 2012), particularly in areas with few salmon farms.

The salmon louse is a stenohaline copepod whose survival and development are optimal in high-salinity sea water. In this context, it is infor- mative to consider the life history of L. salmonis as a series of behavioural and reproductive strate- gies to cope with an obvious dilemma: survival in an environment that ranges from low host density and high salinity to one of high host density and ultimately fresh water. For populations of L. sal- monis that occur on wild salmon, reproduction and transmission of the copepod are coordinated with the two intervals in the life history of the sal- mon in which host density and salinity are opti- mized: in coastal ecosystems during the spawning migration of adults and following the return of juvenile salmon to the ocean. Alternatively, on captive salmon populations that reside in net pens in high-salinity coastal environments for 12–24 months, the opportunities for reproduction and transmis- sion are theoretically continuously high, with increased opportunity for more intense and there- fore harmful infections and for shedding larvae at higher densities into the surrounding water col- umn over prolonged periods. Much of the current scientific interest in L. salmonisresults from a new host–parasite system in which wild salmonids

interact with populations of captive salmon in these high-salinity coastal ecosystems.

The life cycle of L. salmonis comprises non- feeding planktonic larvae (nauplii), infective planktonic copepodites, immature chalimi embed- ded on the host skin and mobile pre-adults and adults that move freely over the host skin (Hay- ward, Andrews & Nowak 2011). The infectious larval copepodid subsists entirely on endogenous lipid reserves and therefore devotes its time entirely to host-finding and attachment via a suite of adaptive behavioural traits. These traits include positive phototaxis, positive semiotaxis and posi- tive rheotaxis, which confer to the larval copepod the ability to display diurnal vertical migrations, respond to waterborne gradients of host-derived chemicals and move towards vibrations of host origin, respectively (Heuch, Parsons & Boxaspen 1995; Heuch & Karlsen 1997; Aarseth & Schram 1999; Bailey et al.2006). In addition, attachment following settlement is mediated by chemorecep- tors associated with the copepodid antennules (Bron, Sommerville & Rae 1993). At compatible temperatures and salinities, the free-swimming copepodid survives up to 7 days (Stucchi et al.

2011), although energy content and attachment to the host decline between 3 and 7 days (Tucker, Sommerville & Wootten 2000).

Although L. salmonis occurs throughout the Northern Hemisphere, genetically distinct variants occur in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Micro- satellite data from six loci revealed significant vari- ations between populations from the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean (Todd et al. 2004).

Similarly, Tjensvoll, Glover & Nylund (2006) reported differences in the mitochondrial genome between a population of L. salmonis from Japan and the Atlantic Ocean. Subsequently, based on samples obtained from nine populations through- out the Pacific Ocean, it was found that nuclear genes differ, on average, by 3.2% and the mito- chondrial genome by 7.1% between Pacific and Atlantic forms of the parasite (Yazawa et al.

2008). This finding is consistent with the geo- graphic isolation and divergence of salmon belonging to Oncorhynchus and Salmo 11–24 mil- lion years ago (McKay, Devlin & Smith 1996). A weak but statistically significant genetic differentia- tion was detected among salmon lice sampled in the North Atlantic, suggesting that salmon lice display a subtle population structure throughout this range. A positive relationship between

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geographic and genetic distance has also been reported (Glover et al. 2011). A related study failed to detect a population structure inL. salmo- nisfrom the Pacific Ocean (Messmer et al.2011).

Gene flow among populations in both oceans therefore appears high and most likely results from the association of the parasite with highly migratory hosts.

Lice–host interactions

The host suffers significant physiological and pathological consequences due to its interactions with L. salmonis that are largely dependent on the number and developmental stage of the copepod.

In Atlantic salmon, while physiological changes are evident during infection by the chalimus stages, the feeding behaviour of the pre-adult and adult copepods combined with their unrestricted mobility on the host is responsible for the most severe pathophysiological consequences (Finstad et al. 2000). Heavy infections lead to erosion of the epidermis with exposure of the dermis and, in severe cases, skeletal muscle. Morbidity and mor- tality resulting from infection with L. salmonis are rare among wild salmon (Johnson et al. 1996).

Prior to the systematic application of efficacious treatments, severe infections were common among netpen-reared salmon (Johnson et al.2004). More common, and therefore of greater significance, are the subclinical physiological consequences of infec- tions, including stress, changes in blood glucose or electrolytes, reduced haematocrits and reduced swimming performance (Wagner, Fast & Johnson 2008). These effects are strongly influenced by the number of copepods and their stage of develop- ment. In contrast, the effects of L. salmonis vary among species of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) because of differences in natural susceptibil- ity to the parasite. Salmon lice are rejected more rapidly by coho,Oncorhynchus kisutch (Walbaum), and pink, O. gorbuscha (Walbaum), salmon than by Chinook, O. tshawytscha (Walbaum), and chum, O. keta (Walbaum), salmon, and, in con- trast to chum salmon, juvenile coho and pink sal- mon avoid the clinical consequences of infections (Johnson & Albright 1992; Jones et al. 2007).

Pink salmon first enter the ocean at a mean weight of approximately 0.3 g and may be exposed toL. salmonis at this time, thus providing a unique opportunity to assess the ontogeny of innate resistance to L. salmonis. Mortality is

significantly elevated among salmon weighing 0.3 g, but not among larger size classes following laboratory exposure, suggesting that the onset of resistance to L. salmonis occurs in pink salmon between 0.3 and 0.7 g (Jones, Kim & Bennett 2008a). Subsequent research confirmed this initial finding and, based on body ion and maximum swimming velocity tests, defined a ‘no-effect’

threshold of 0.5 g for L. salmonis infections in juvenile pink salmon (Nendick et al. 2011; Sack- ville et al. 2011). Further, these studies showed that in the smallest salmon, salmon lice induce changes to the skin that result in the loss of ion- oregulatory homoeostasis.

A more thorough understanding of the mecha- nisms of innate and acquired defence responses of salmonids to L. salmonis may form the basis of novel management strategies. Differences in sus- ceptibility to L. salmonis among salmon species were initially associated with histological evidence of local inflammatory processes at the infection site (Johnson & Albright 1992). Subsequent stud- ies indicated a relationship between susceptibility and the reduced or delayed expression of a rela- tively small number of proinflammatory genes (Fast et al.2006; Jones et al. 2007; Jones, Fast &

Johnson 2008b). Coincidently, L. salmonis feeding behaviour consists not only of mechanical abra- sion and consumption of host tissues, but also the production of parasite excretory/secretory products (SEPs) (Fast et al. 2003). The L. salmonis SEPs contain prostaglandin E2 (Fast et al. 2004), and in vitrostudies showed that the SEPs trigger a sig- nificant dysregulation of immune-related genes in either primary or immortalized Atlantic salmon head kidney leucocytes (Fast, Ross & Johnson 2005; Fast et al. 2007). Further research on the differential immunomodulatory capacities of L. salmonis SEPs from Atlantic- and Pacific-type L. salmonis (Yazawa et al. 2008) is necessary to better define the resistance characteristics among salmon species.

Management of L. salmonis will also benefit from improved salmon breeding programmes and the application of genomic technologies. In Atlan- tic salmon, intraspecific heterogeneity in resistance to L. salmonis is observed among spawning stocks and full-sib families (Glover et al. 2004, 2005;

Kolstad et al. 2005; Gjerde, Odegard & Thor- land, 2011). Although the heritability of louse counts ranges from 0.07 to 0.33, indicating a genetic basis for differences among families, there

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is disagreement regarding the identity of acquired immunological markers of resistance to the para- site (Glover et al. 2007; Gharbi et al. 2009). An improved understanding of innate markers may be necessary to explain resistance to L. salmonis (Gharbi et al.2009). Global gene expression stud- ies have begun to elucidate the pathways of innate and acquired salmonid defence responses toL. sal- monis infections (Skugor et al. 2008; Sutherland et al.2011; Tadiso et al.2011). There is currently very little evidence that Atlantic salmon mount a protective immune response to either L. salmonis infection or immunization with parasite antigens (Grayson et al. 1991; Reilly & Mulcahy 1993;

Roper et al. 1995). Furthermore, Atlantic salmon remain susceptible to reinfection following recov- ery from L. salmonis (Raynard et al. 2002). Thus, the development of a vaccine against L. salmonis in Atlantic salmon remains a long-term goal and may depend on the selection of suitable salmon strains in which natural resistance is already high.

However, salmon lice will also be under the same evolutionary mechanisms as other animals.

Intensive farming will alter the selection criteria such as life-history traits and virulence where fre- quent use of antiparasite drugs and increased host density may select for faster production of parasite transmission stages via earlier reproduction and increased early fecundity (Mennerat et al. 2010, 2012). They also show a clear link between early reproduction, increased fecundity and increased virulence.

Salmon louse population dynamics Wild salmonids

Within Europe, significant anthropogenic influ- ences have affected the historical native range of Atlantic salmon; in many rivers, salmon can only breed with human intervention. Many populations are exposed to pollution, changed temperature regimes and low or managed water flow. The effects of diseases and parasites on the salmon populations are particularly difficult to determine (Bakke & Harris 1998). Salmon lice are endemic on wild Atlantic salmon, sea trout and Arctic charr, Salvelinus alpinus (L.), in the North Atlan- tic. In Ireland, a 20-year monitoring programme indicates that the prevalence of L. salmonis is con- sistently in excess of 90% (Jackson & Minchin 1992; Costelloe et al. 1998; Copley et al. 2005;

Jackson et al. 2012). The reported levels are con- sistent with data from Scotland (Todd et al.

2000) and Norway (Berland 1993). The near- shore population structure of lice infesting wild Atlantic salmon is quite different from that of populations observed in the offshore or returning adults. Samples of Atlantic salmon (n = 547) cap- tured in an interceptory offshore drift net fishery over a 3-year period showed a prevalence approaching 100% for L. salmonis, and the popu- lation comprised largely of adult lice. Atlantic sal- mon captured in an inshore and estuarine draft net fishery (n = 381) over a 2-year period had a much higher proportion of juvenile lice and over 30% of samples contained fish with chalimus stages (Jackson et al. 2012, this issue). The pres- ence of chalimus stages indicates recent successful infestation and points to re-infestation of return- ing adult wild populations in inshore waters with a potential for amplification of louse levels that are not evident in offshore stocks.

Salmon louse populations on wild Atlantic sal- mon show a mean abundance of 6–33 per fish (D. Jackson, unpubl. data, Copley et al. 2005;

Costelloe et al. 1998; Jackson et al. 2012). Adult female mean abundance varies from 0 to 17 per fish. Female L. salmonis from wild salmon are lar- ger than those recorded on farmed fish (Jackson

& Minchin 1992; Copley et al. 2005) and have higher fecundity (Jackson & Minchin 1992).

There is good evidence for a pulse of infestation pressure in the spring as water temperatures rise and the returning adult wild salmon arrive off the coast (Jackson et al. 1997). This spring pulse of infectivity coincides with a maximum in adult female somatic size, which is linked to increased fecundity (Jackson et al. 2000). Several studies have identified evidence for increased infestation pressure on farmed salmon related to infective stages from wild salmonids in Ireland (Jackson et al. 1997), in association with spring salmon runs in Killary Harbour and grilse runs in Clifden Bay, and in Scotland (Marshall 2003), in associa- tion with sea trout in Laxford Bay, Sutherland.

Unpublished data from Beartragh Buı Bay, a hy- drographically isolated bay where the farm had been fallow for a number of years, shows a sus- tained level of infestation pressure on autumn smolts stocked in late 2008 through the winter months. The most likely host reservoir to serve as a source of these infestations is resident wild sea trout from the river systems entering into the bay.

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These river systems support significant populations of sea trout and two of the systems operate as commercial recreational fisheries for sea trout. A sustained level of infestation pressure was recorded from December 2008 through May 2009 with juveniles detected in each month rising to a maxi- mum in May of 4.6 juveniles per fish in the absence of any adult ovigerous females on the farmed fish (D. Jackson, pers. comm.).

In the mid-North Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea, L. salmonis was consistently observed on sal- mon belonging to six Oncorhynchus spp. surveyed between 1991 and 1997 (Nagasawa 2001). The parasite occurred on 93.8% of all (n = 1267) pink salmon examined, with a mean intensity of 5.9 lice per fish. On chum salmon, the prevalence was 36.4% with a mean intensity of 2.1. Among Chinook, coho and sockeye, O. nerka (Walbaum).

salmon, and steelhead, O. mykiss (Walbaum), trout, the prevalence ranged from 7.8% (sockeye) to 91.5% (steelhead) and the intensity ranged from 1.1 lice (sockeye) to 6.07 lice (steelhead).

The consistently high abundance of salmon lice on chum salmon in all years and of pink salmon in alternating years indicates that these species support the vast majority of the L. salmonis popu- lation in the North Pacific Ocean, supporting ear- lier work in which pink and chum salmon accounted for 90% of all salmon lice (Nagasawa 1987). The Pacific coast of North America is unique in supporting large populations of anad- romous salmonids coincident with the production of Atlantic salmon in seawater netpens (Noakes

& Beamish 2011). Surveys conducted along the Pacific coast of North America confirmed the high prevalence of salmon lice observed on the high seas and showed that the proportion of gravid L. salmonis ranged from 14% to 36% on chinook, coho, sockeye, pink and chum salmon (Beamish et al. 2005). In another study, it was shown that in coastal waters of western Canada and the USA, larger salmon were more heavily infested with L. salmonis than smaller salmon (<1 year at sea) (Trudel et al. 2007), in agree- ment with observations by Nagasawa (1987).

Farmed salmonids

The concentration of infective copepodites is important in the population dynamics of salmon lice. Within an area, the copepodite concentration is dependent on the number of mature females,

their fecundity and survival of the nauplii. Water temperature affects female fecundity, development times through all life-cycle stages and probably also survival through all life-cycle stages of salmon lice (Stien et al. 2005). This intrinsic temperature dependency is assumed to be a basic driving force for the population dynamics of salmon lice, which has been characterized by annual oscillations in parasite abundance (Lees, Gettinby & Revie 2008b; Jansen et al. 2012). Temperature probably affects all life processes in the multi-stage life cycle of salmon lice, but the relationship between tem- perature and salmon louse population dynamics is not simple. Annual peaks and troughs in the abundance of mobile salmon lice may appear delayed compared with maximum and minimum annual temperature (Jansen et al.2012). Addition- ally, factors other than temperature may promote cyclic population dynamics. In Pacific Canada, for example, the number of salmon lice peaked in spring and fell to the minimum in late summer.

The increase in louse abundance during the autumn and winter periods was suggested to be associated with the spread of infection from wild salmon returning to spawn (Marty, Saksida &

Quinn 2010). Factors such as the abundance of plankton-consuming organisms and of pelagic fish serving as unsuitable targets for the copepodites could also influence the survival of the planktonic stages of salmon lice.

Experimentally, salmon louse survival is com- promised at salinity levels below 29 parts per thousand (ppt) (Bricknell et al.2006), and nauplii do not develop into infective copepodites at salini- ties below 25 ppt (Johnson & Albright 1991).

Assessing the effects of varying salinity levels on salmon louse infections, however, is complicated by the fact that layers of water with varying salin- ity levels tend to stratify in the water column, with low-salinity layers on top. Hence, salmon lice may actively avoid low-salinity waters by vertical movement (Heuch 1995). Nevertheless, farms that are exposed to freshwater runoff from rivers are negatively associated with salmon lice abundance (Heuchet al.2009).

Salmon louse nauplii and pre-infection copepo- dites disperse as plankton in the water currents.

Hence, it is expected that water current character- istics will influence salmon louse infections.

Hydrodynamic modelling as a basis for tracking salmon louse particles in water currents over time is increasingly being used to study the spread of

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salmon louse infection (Amundrud & Murray 2009). Such models are in need of broader valida- tion through analyses of salmon louse data. The integration of hydrodynamic modelling and popu- lation modelling of salmon lice is a growing field of research where future advances may be expected.

Fish size is associated with salmon louse abun- dance in farmed fish, such that large fish carry high intensities of infection (Lees et al. 2008b;

Heuch et al. 2009; Jansen et al. 2012). This phe- nomenon can be due to an increased contact rate between infective parasites and large hosts (Tucker, Sommerville & Wootten 2002), and/or the fact that the increased exposure time of large hosts leads to accumulated intensities of infection (Jackson & Minchin 1992). Regardless of the mechanism, the tendency for large salmonid hosts to carry many salmon lice implies that high con- centrations of large-sized farmed salmon poten- tially support large parasite populations. This may be a concern for pest management strategies that involve synchronized production in some areas, that is, towards the late part of the production cycle when all farmed fish within an area have reached a large size.

A key concept in theoretical epidemiology is that increasing host density should promote the popu- lation growth of a parasite because the chances of a host contact increase as host density increases, that is, increased transmission increases the parasite reproductive rate (Anderson & May 1991). Salmo- nid farming in many areas, for example, in Nor- way, results in host densities that massively increase the abundance of salmon lice (Johansen et al. 2011), raising the expectation that transmis- sion and population size of the parasite will also increase. This host density effect has been docu- mented at both the level of individual salmon farms and on larger scales. At the farm level, the rate of salmon louse infections on juvenile wild sal- mon increases during migration past salmon farms, suggesting that salmon louse transmission is associ- ated with farm-produced infectious stages of lice (Krkosek, Lewis & Volpe 2005). Furthermore, a close relationship between estimated numbers of salmon lice on farmed fish and the prevalence of salmon lice on juvenile migrating pink salmon has been demonstrated (Martyet al.2010).

A long-term study (2002–2007) from a Scot- tish loch suggested that spatial and temporal den- sities of salmon lice planktonic stages depend on

the location of salmon farms (Penston et al.

2008). Significant correlations between copepo- dites in the water column and estimated numbers of gravid female lice on farms were reported, and generally farms with the greatest number of sal- mon were suggested to contribute more to the densities of copepodites in the water column than farms with fewer fish (Penston & Davies 2009).

In a large-scale study covering all cohorts of farmed salmonids in Norway over the years 2002 –2010, local densities of farmed fish were found to affect parasite numbers as well as efforts to con- trol infections. Farms situated in high-density clusters reported generally higher sea louse abun- dance, increased frequency of chemotherapy treat- ments and more frequent use of cleaner fish to control infections. Adding to the effect of local densities of farmed fish was a strong temporal cor- relation with farm-level reports on salmon louse abundance (Jansen et al. 2012). This latter effect is due in part to the close proximity of a high number of susceptible hosts leading to auto- infections.

These studies convincingly demonstrate that the increased host density associated with salmon farming promotes transmission and population growth of the salmon louse. The implication of the host density effect is that management should aim to focus on salmon louse infection pressure, that is, accounting for host and parasite densities (Penston & Davies 2009; Jansen et al. 2012).

These data also suggest that effective countermea- sures to sea louse infections must take into consid- eration host and farm densities in the context of local oceanographic and other environmental conditions.

Interactions between farmed and wild salmonids.

Salmon farms no doubt have profound effects on the local abundance of some parasites (Bakke &

Harris 1998), but the quantitative impact of their effect on wild population sizes of salmon and trout remains controversial. A 99% collapse in the pink salmon population and population extinction in only 3.9 generations were predicted due to the impact of salmon lice originating from Atlantic salmon farms in the Broughton Archipelago, BC, Canada (Krkosek et al. 2007). These authors esti- mated an 80% (range 16–97%) louse-induced mortality for pink salmon juveniles. Nevertheless, the population of pink salmon has steadily

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increased over the last few years (Brooks & Jones 2008), and the latter authors suggested misinter- pretation of data was the basis for the prediction of extinction. The number of pink salmon return- ing to spawn in the fall predicts the number of female salmon lice on farm fish in the following spring. This accounts for 98% of the annual vari- ability in the prevalence of salmon lice on out- migrating wild juvenile salmon (Marty et al.

2010). The latter study concluded that productiv- ity of wild salmon is not negatively associated with either farm louse number or farm fish pro- duction, although this conclusion is not without controversy (Krkoseket al.2011).

Nominal catches of wild Atlantic salmon in the North Atlantic (NASCO 2011) have declined since the turn of the twentieth century (Hesthagen

& Hansen 1991), indicating a corresponding reduction in stock size. While this says nothing about the quantitative impact of salmon lice on populations or individual stocks, it indicates that non-aquaculture factors contribute to the overall variation in seawater survival of the wild salmon population in the North Atlantic. The size of sal- monid stocks in both freshwater and marine envi- ronments results from an interaction of many anthropogenic and natural biological and physical factors. The wide array of factors that cause varia- tions in the size of salmon and trout stocks is fre- quently underestimated or overlooked in attempts to find simple explanations. However, the com- plexity makes it extremely difficult to separate and quantify the effect on each parameter. Figure 1 shows the relative nominal catch of Atlantic sal- mon from 1960 until today in countries without or with limited salmon aquaculture (USA, Russia, Iceland, Sweden, Denmark, The Faroe Islands, Greenland, UK [except Scotland], France and Spain), major aquaculture producers of Atlantic salmon in countries with spawning wild Atlantic salmon (Norway, Ireland, Scotland and Atlantic Canada) and Norway as the dominating producer.

Nominal catches have significantly declined in all regions, and the pattern of decline is similar among regions. Since 1990, the aquaculture pro- duction in Norway has increased 6.5-fold to 1 million tons in 2011, and a recent meta-analysis suggests the decline in population sizes tends to be higher in areas with high density of salmon farms (Oteroet al.2011). Despite the decline, the International Council for the Exploration of the Seas (ICES) has estimated that the North-East

Atlantic salmon stock complex remains at full reproductive capacity (Committee 2011; ICES 2011).

In Norway, several approaches have been used to investigate infection rates on wild Atlantic sal- mon and sea trout stocks. Direct measurements of the salmon louse infection rate of wild smolts have been obtained by surface trawling of wild migrating smolts (Holm, Holst & Hansen 2000;

Holst et al. 2003; Heuch et al. 2005). The num- ber of lice on sentinel smolts held in small cages in a fjord during the time of natural smolt migra- tion is also used to estimate infestation rates in addition to catches of sea trout and salmon in gill- nets and traps. All methods have limitations, and there are obvious risks for getting skewness in the data (Bjørn et al. 2011). Only fish that survived the infestation will be caught, behaviour and catchability will depend on infestation rate, fishing gear is size- and species sensitive, and place and time may not be representative for the overall situation.

Early seawater mortality and performance have also been estimated by treating smolts with anti- lice drugs prior to their release and comparing their recapture rates as adults with untreated con- trol groups. The efficacy of the drugs is limited to weeks or in some cases months (Stone et al.

2000a; Hvidsten et al. 2007; Skilbrei et al.

2008), and it is assumed that differences in ocean survival are caused by infestation of control fish with salmon lice during the early stage of smolt migration. The drug emamectin benzoate is usually administered to the fish, either orally (Slice®) (Skilbrei & Wennevik 2006; Jackson et al.

2011a,b; Gargan et al. 2012; Skilbrei et al. 2012) or by intraperitoneal injection to increase the mean dosage and reduce the variability between individuals (Glover et al. 2010; Skilbrei et al.

2012). Substance EX (Pharmaq) has also been used (Hvidsten et al. 2007; Skilbrei et al. 2012).

Following the release of hatchery-reared smolts of the Orkla River stock in Trondheimsfjord in mid-Norway from 1996 to 1998 (Hvidsten et al.

2007), significantly more treated smolts survived in 1998, coincident with a high rate of salmon louse infection in the wild smolts. Hatchery- reared smolts from Dale River stock in western Norway from 1997 to 1999, and from 2001 to 2009, were also released in an area that houses one of the largest concentrations of fish farms in Norway. Significant differences were detected in

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3 of the 35 groups released at different times and sites: the only release in 1997, one in 2002 and one in 2007 (Skilbrei & Wennevik 2006;

Skilbrei et al. 2012), but there were no tendency in the majority of the release groups suggesting differences in survival between the treated and control groups. Overall, the probability of recap- turing a treated compared with an untreated smolt was estimated to have an odds ratio of 1.17:1.

Similar treat-and-release studies have been con- ducted in Ireland. Releases of Burrishoole grilse stock smolt from western Ireland from 2001 to 2008 resulted in a clear trend in which treated fish returned in higher numbers in 9 of 10 years (Jackson et al. 2011b), and the differences were statistically significant in 4 of 10. The magnitude of the differences was not large, however, and no differences were observed between the mean returns of treated and untreated groups (analysis of variance n = 20). The authors concluded that the level of infestation pressure by salmon lice experienced by the outwardly migrating smolts was not a consistently significant source of addi- tional marine mortality. Similar results were obtained with three other river stocks in 2002 and 2006 (Jackson et al. 2011b). In a separate study, releases of smolts over 3 years in two riv- ers and 2 years in a third river in Ireland from 2004 to 2006 showed a similar treatment effect (Gargan et al. 2012). The recapture of treated fish was significantly higher in three of eight releases and also for the combined data. They concluded that treated smolts were, in general, 1.8 times more likely to return and that salmon louse-induced mortality in adult returns in Ire- land can be significant. Significant differences were found both where adjacent farms had no adult female burden (one case) and where there were adjacent farms with adult female lice (two cases).

The results based on these assessments of early sea mortality due to salmon louse infection vary considerably in relation to location, release date and from year to year. The Norwegian investiga- tions, however, indicated a binominal tendency:

the numbers of recaptures of treated and control fish were either clearly equal or significantly dif- ferent. This suggests that salmon lice nauplii are not uniformly distributed in the sea, but rather have a patchy distribution in space and time. This type of variability represents one of the

methodological challenges when using release/

recapture experiments to produce estimates of early sea mortality due to salmon lice on migrat- ing smolts, especially if there is only one release per location per year. Other potential biases are the large annual variability in ocean survival resulting in low recaptures (Jackson et al. 2011b;

Skilbrei et al. 2012) and uncertainties regarding duration of efficacy against salmon lice afforded by the treatment (Skilbrei et al.2008, 2009; Glo- ver et al. 2010). The latter point recognizes the absence of efficacy of emamectin benzoate against salmon lice in several regions. At present, the available information suggests that the majority of the released smolt groups were not at all or only moderately affected by salmon lice, but that some groups were clearly affected. There are also clear local and year-to-year differences in the risk of being too heavily infested with salmon lice. A more up-to-date study, comprising data already published by Jackson et al. (2011a,b), together with results published by Gargan et al. (2012) and previously unpublished data, including a sec- ond time series from a catchment on Ireland’s west coast (Jackson, et al., 2012), has confirmed these findings. The data, comprising over 350 000 fish from eight locations across nine release dates, show a similar trend in survival between treated and control groups over time when fitted to regression lines (Fig. 2). Analysis based on modelling the percentage return as a binomial response variable, adjusted for location and release-year effects, estimates the probability of returning as 1.14:1 in favour of the treated group, or an absolute difference in sea water returns of approximately 1%. Analysis based on modelling the percentage as a continuous response variable indicates that location (i.e. river;

P < 0.001) and release date (P = 0.001) were both more highly significant than treatment (P = 0.034) and an approximately 1% difference between treated and control groups. Thus, esti- mates from Ireland and Norway indicate an odds ratio of 1.1:1-1.2:1 for sea lice treated Atlantic salmon smolt to survive sea migration compared to untreated smolts. According to the opinion of a Norwegian expert group (Taranger et al. 2012), an estimated salmon lice-induced mortality above 10% is expected to have a moderate population regulatory impact, whereas higher mortalities, close to 50%, would have a far greater impact on the affected salmon population.

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Control: farm monitoring and management thresh- olds. Lice levels on farmed fish have been moni- tored in Ireland since 1991, and a comprehensive monitoring programme has been in place since 1993 (O’Donohoe et al. 2011). Lice levels on farmed salmon increase with time at sea (Jackson et al. 2000) with two sea-winter fish carrying the heaviest burden. Fallowing and separation of gen- erations of farmed fish reduce the effect of sea age on the lice burden (Jackson et al. 1997;

O’Donohoe et al. 2011) of farmed fish. Studies of wild salmon at sea reveal a similar increased abundance of lice with sea age in salmon obtained from north of the Faroe Islands (Jacob- sen & Gaard 1997). Salmon lice monitoring and control measures were modified in 2000 and formed the basis of an integrated management protocol for salmon lice in farmed salmon in Ire- land (Jackson, Hassett & Copley 2002). Crucial elements of this strategy were identified as separa- tion of generations, annual fallowing of sites and strategic applications of treatments, good fish health management and close cooperation between farms. The monitoring and inspection programme results revealed the benefits of this approach on levels of control achieved from 2000 through 2004 (Fig. 3). From 2005 to 2007, there was a progressive increase in the mean levels of infestation of farmed fish. The increased infesta- tion was identified as resulting from a range of factors, including changes in production practices (Jackson 2011). To address these issues, the Irish authorities issued new guidelines as a Strategy for Improved Pest Control on Irish Salmon Farms in 2008. These guidelines were implemented over the succeeding 2 years and have led to a progressive reduction in the mean levels of infestation (Fig. 3).

In British Columbia, Canada, the autumn rise in L. salmoniscounts in farmed Atlantic salmon is a consequence of transmission from the large pop- ulation of returning wild Pacific salmon (Saksida et al. 2007a,b). Despite this annual occurrence, routine monitoring of louse numbers on farmed salmon in British Columbia began only in 2003, in response to concerns that infections on juvenile pink salmon were the result of transmission from farmed salmon (Morton et al. 2004). A manage- ment plan, established in 2003, defined seasonally adjusted salmon louse monitoring and reporting of data and the establishment of action thresholds (Saksida et al. 2007a). Since 2007, coordinated treatment with emamectin benzoate applied to farmed salmon 1 or 2 months prior to the migra- tion of juvenile pink and chum salmon into the ocean in the Broughton Archipelago has coincided with a significant and persistent decline in L. sal- monis abundance on the wild salmon (Jones &

Hargreaves 2009; Jones & Beamish 2011). Fur- thermore, in British Columbia, there is no evi- dence that the efficacy of emamectin benzoate against L. salmonishas changed between 2003 and 2008 (Saksida, Morrison & Revie 2010). In this region, there are ongoing efforts to adequately define salmon lice interactions between wild and farmed salmon using mathematical models (Marty et al. 2010; Krkoseket al.2011).

The Salmon Lice Directive (FOR-2009-08-18 -1095 2009) provides a framework for the Norwe- gian surveillance programme for salmon lice in farms. This directive requires that each farm has a general plan for prevention and treatment of sal- mon lice which as a minimum should contain plans for counting lice in the farm, routines and methods for treatment, including coordinated treatment within the region and documentation of

0 5 10 15 20

00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09

% Survival

Year

Control Regression y = 119.131 + –0.003 * x r2 = 0.3198

+95% CL –95% CL

SLICE Regression y = 134.522 + –0.003 * x r2 = 0.3754

+95% CL –95% CL

Figure 2 Percentage survival of smolts in Ireland from 2001 to 2009 with 95% con- fidence limits (CL) fitted. Sea lice infesta- tion was not implicated in the observed decline in survival common to both groups (Jackson et al.2011a). The treated groups were given a prophylactic SLICE treatment giving protection against sea lice infestation for approximately 9 weeks (Jackson et al.

2011b).

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ability to complete treatments within deadlines, routines and methods for evaluation of effect of treatment, routines for use of cleaner fish, routines for fallowing, which other farms are included in the coordinated treatment plan and how the farm seeks to protect wild salmon and trout from nega- tive impacts. An annual update of the plan is required by the Norwegian Food Safety Authority.

This directive imposes a requirement for record- ing and reporting of data on water temperature, salinity, date and cages counted (minimum 50%

of all cages, all if farm has <3), number of sessile lice, number of mobile lice, number of mature females, dates for treatment, drugs used in treat- ments and possible drug resistance. The key data are published on a weekly basis on www.luse data.no.

Action levels in Norway are 0.5 mature female or three mobile lice on average during the period 1 January through 31 August and one mature female or five mobile during the rest of the year.

The Norwegian Food Safety Authority also has the authority to impose specific and stricter regu- lations in exposed areas, including reduction in biomass and coordinated treatment and fallowing (FOR-2009-08-18-1095 2009).

Control: chemotherapeutants interventions. Over the years, a variety of treatments have been tried against salmon louse infestations. Initially, formal- dehyde baths were tested, but proved to have questionable effects (Johannessen 1974). Organo- phosphates were then introduced, the first being metrifonate as an oral treatment (Brandal & Egi- dius 1977). However, the low safety margin of oral delivery in salmon led to the introduction of bath applications (Brandal & Egidius 1979). In Scotland, dichlorvos, a related organophosphate, was introduced in 1979 (Rae 1979) and subse- quently became the treatment of choice in most salmon-producing countries until the early 1990s when resistance problems became evident (Jones, Sommerville & Wootten 1992; Denholm et al.

2002). Alternative bath treatments were launched:

first, natural pyrethrins, which were administered as a top dressing in oil at the surface of the pen (Jakobsen & Holm 1990). The administration method, however, was rather impractical. Despite a narrow safety margin, bath treatments with hydrogen peroxide were later introduced, espe- cially in areas where lice had increased tolerance to dichlorvos (Thomassen 1993). In the late 1980s, oral treatments with other compounds

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5

3.0 Ovigerous sea lice levels nationally (May)

Treatment trigger level Mean ovigerous sea lice (SE)

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Mobile sea lice levels nationally (May) Mean mobile sea lice (SE)

DAFF Pest management strategy

Figure 3 Annual trend (May mean) (SE) ofLepeophtheirus salmonison one-sea-winter salmon.

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were also tried, the first being the macrocyclic lac- tone ivermectin, which demonstrated a good and long-lasting effect, but also a low margin of safety (Palmer et al. 1987). The chitin synthesis inhibi- tor diflubenzuron was tested in the early 1990s (Horsberg & Hoy 1991); later, another similar compound, teflubenzuron (Branson, Ronsberg &

Ritchie 2000), appeared. These compounds had a very broad safety margin, but only targeted the early developmental stages and not adult parasites.

In the mid-1990s, azamethiphos, an organophos- phate posing less of an occupational hazard than dichlorvos, was launched (Roth et al. 1996), after which the synthetic pyrethroids cypermethrin (Hart et al. 1997) and deltamethrin (Roth 2000) were introduced. The pyrethroids had a reasonably good safety margin and a good effect on all devel- opmental stages. Finally, in 1999, the macrocyclic lactone emamectin benzoate came to the market (Stone et al. 2000b). The safety margin for this orally delivered compound was substantially better than that for ivermectin, and the compound was effective against all developmental stages, lasting up to 10 weeks. After 1999, no new therapeutic agents against salmon lice have been launched. In Norway, the utilization of the different products has been recorded since the early 1980s, and Table 1 illustrates their rise and fall over time.

Most anti-salmon lice agents act by disrupting neuronal signalling (Roberts & Hutson 1999).

Organophosphates inhibit the enzyme acetylcho- line esterase, which is responsible for catalysing the hydrolysis of the neurotransmitter acetylcho- line at the post-synaptic membrane. Failure to degrade acetylcholine to choline and acetic acid results in continuous neuronal firing, subsequently followed by paralysis and death. The effect is best on pre-adult and adult parasites. Organophos- phates (azamethiphos) have a rapid effect that can be recorded after a few hours. The pyrethroids (cypermethrin and deltamethrin) interfere with nerve impulses by modulating the opening and closing of voltage-gated sodium channels in axons, leading to repetitive synaptic discharge, followed by paralysis and death. Pyrethroids are effective against all developmental stages, but the full effect can only be determined after 1–2 weeks, depend- ing on the temperature. Avermectins (emamectin benzoate) modulate specific glutamate- and gamma-aminobutyric acid-gated anion channels.

The influx of chloride ions results in hyperpolar- ization, leading to disruption of nerve impulses,

paralysis and death. They are effective against all developmental stages, but the full effect can only be determined after 2–3 weeks. In arthropods, they act through ingestion as stomach poisons, and emamectin benzoate has therefore been developed as a premix for medicated feed. Chitin biosynthe- sis inhibitors (diflubenzuron and teflubenzuron) are also used as in-feed compounds. They do not interfere with neuronal signalling, instead they inhibit key processes in the chitin synthesis of the parasite, which results in a thin and fragile exoskeleton after moulting. Hydrogen peroxide is a potent oxidizing compound that disrupts mem- branes. The effect is rapid and most efficacious on pre-adult and adult parasites.

The development of resistance in a parasite population renders an antiparasitic treatment inef- fective as was evident in several regions in Nor- way, where organophosphates in the early and mid-1990s totally lost their effect against salmon lice (Denholm et al. 2002). Later, evidence of treatment failures with pyrethroids was reported in Norway, Scotland and Ireland (Sevatdal &

Horsberg 2003; Sevatdalet al.2005a).

Treatment failures have also been reported for emamectin benzoate. Initially, these incidents were isolated cases and could frequently be attributed to erroneous calculations of biomass, concurrent diseases and other factors. Appetite varies consid- erably between individual fish, causing huge varia- tions in the obtained tissue concentrations of orally administered agents (Berg & Horsberg 2009), and this can be misinterpreted as resis- tance. In 2006, however, several reports from Chile indicated a systematic failure of efficacy by emamectin benzoate towards Caligus rogercresseyi (Bravo, Sevatdal & Horsberg 2008). Bioassay tests were established, and the parasites demonstrated significantly reduced sensitivity. In addition, there were reports of reduced efficacy of emamectin against L. salmonis in Ireland and Scotland. A Scottish epidemiological survey of salmon lice burdens linked to emamectin treatments between 2002 and 2006 demonstrated a trend towards gradually reduced efficacy. Although salmon lice infestations were reduced following treatments, not all treatments were effective (Lees et al.

2008a). In Norway, no comprehensive data have been published, but a survey demonstrated reduced sensitivity towards emamectin benzoate in more than 50% of the salmon lice strains exam- ined (Horsberg 2012). Reduced sensitivity to

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Table1Consumption(kilogramsactivesubstance)ofdifferentagentsagainstsalmonliceinNorwayfrom1981to2011(Grave,Engelstad&Søli1991;Graveetal.2004;TheNorwegianInsti- tuteofPublicHealth2012) Metrifonate (Neguvon)Dichlorvos (Nuvan)Azamethiphos (Salmosan)Hydrogen peroxide Diflubenzuron (Lepsidon, Releeze)Teflubenzuron (Ektobann)Pyrethrins (Py-Sal)

Cypermethrin (Excis, Betamax)Deltamethrin (Alphamax)Emamectin (Slice) 19814920 19826300 19839810 198414820 198528260 198624860250 198773901310 198831903200 198933003488 199024083416 199121443588 199219463115 199317792470710000 19941227114738929000032 199539573834000026 1996161606160000160610923 1997363152000036115101828 19981824371334319 1999145023119114 20001262732330 200128691912 2002622320 2003591623 2004551732 2005451639 2006492360 2007302973 200866323981 2009188430800014132028886241 201033463071000183910801076122 201124373144000704264854105

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emamectin benzoate has so far not been recorded on the Pacific coast of Canada (Saksida et al.

2011).

Resistance is documented and quantified through efficacy monitoring (parasite counts before and after treatments) and bioassays (toxico- logical tests of the susceptibility of parasites towards increasing concentrations of the agent in question). Bioassays are labour-intensive and require 50–100 pre-adult parasites per agent (Sevatdal & Horsberg 2003; Sevatdal et al.2005a;

Westcott et al. 2008). A simplified version, how- ever, is currently under development (Helgesen &

Horsberg 2012). Rapid, high-throughput in vitro methods, for example, quantitative polymerase chain reaction-based assays, would be preferable but are dependent on knowledge about the spe- cific resistance mechanisms. These have only partly been elucidated in salmon lice and include target site alterations (Fallang et al. 2004, 2005), enhanced metabolism (Sevatdal et al. 2005b) and possibly enhanced elimination mediated by P-glycoprotein efflux pumps (Tribble, Burka &

Kibenge 2007; Heumann et al. 2012). As several different mechanisms may cause resistance prob- lems, a panel ofin vitrotests is needed.

The development of resistance in salmon lice, especially L. salmonis, is a serious situation. In Norway, Scotland, Ireland and eastern Canada, the number of farmed salmon is far greater than the number of wild salmon. Thus, the main source for re-infestation comes from the farms themselves where regular parasite treatments put a constant selection pressure on resistance develop- ment. In these countries, the influx of naive para- sites from wild fish hosts is limited. Thus, the problem will not disappear by itself. New chemi- cals may only be valuable for a limited time period. Management practices with a variety of non-chemical control methods, preservation of sensitive parasites, coordinated production zones, synchronized treatments and synchronized fallow- ing of sites in larger areas seem to be the most promising strategy to handle the problem.

Control: cleaner fish. The use of wrass as cleaner fish for salmon lice control was developed in the late 1980s (Bjørdal 1988a,b, 1990). The aquaculture industry has depended on wild catches for their supply, and several species are used, for example, goldsinny wrasse, Ctenolabrus rupestris, ballan wrasse, Labrus bergyltaAscanius, corkwing wrasse,

Symphodus melops(L.), rock cook,Centrolabrus exo- leus(L.), cuckoo wrasse,Labrus bimaculatusL., and scale-rayed wrasse, Acantholabrus palloni (Risso) (Espeland et al. 2010). Goldsinny wrasse, ballan wrasse and corkwing wrasse are the species used most frequently in Norway (Blom 2010). Stocking density of approximately 4 wrass per 100 salmon is common, slightly more for small wrasses as gold- sinny and less for larger wrasses. Ballan wrasse are efficient and are often used at rates of 1 per 100 salmon. The successful use of cleaner fish depends on healthy fish and clean cages. Wrass require shel- ter for well-being and readily seek alternative feed sources if the nets are overgrown. Recent experi- ments have shown that lumpfish,Cyclopterus lumpus L., can be used as cleaner fish and that their aqua- culture production is possible (Anon 2012).

The ballan wrasse is the largest of the European wrass, attaining a maximum size of approximately 60 cm (Quignard & Pras 1986), and is therefore a suitable size for being kept in cages with large salmon (3–6 kg) (Muncaster 2008). Based on their wide geographical distribution, they tolerate a wide range of environmental conditions and have been shown to survive in cages over winter in Norway (Bjelland et al. 1996). Over the last few years, there has been a growing interest in farming wrass, with a focus on the ballan wrasse (I. Opstad, P.G. Kvenseth, P. Jensen and A.B.

Skiftesvik, unpubl. data). Although weaning the ballan wrasse from live food to a formulated diet is challenging, I. Opstad, P.G. Kvenseth, P. Jen- sen and A.B. Skiftesvik (unpubl. data) developed a successful weaning diet that supports survival up to 88%.

The rapid increase in wrasse fisheries has raised concerns (Fig. 4), as their biology, ecology and population dynamics are poorly known. Many species change sex during their lifetime, and some have longevity of 20–25 years and are territorial.

These species may therefore be vulnerable to overexploitation (Espelandet al.2010).

Control: vaccination. There are two published studies in which vaccine candidate antigens were tested against salmon lice. Grayson et al. (1995) extracted proteins from adult L. salmonisand used these antigens to immunize Atlantic salmon. They found a significant reduction in gravid female lice on the vaccinated fish, and the lice also produced fewer eggs. More recently, Carpio et al. (2011) made a recombinant antigen from the novel my32

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gene obtained from C. rogercresseyi. The my32 from C. rogercresseyi is similar to a protective anti- gen from ticks (Almazan et al. 2005). Carpio et al. (2011) found that immunization with recombinant my32 resulted in a significant reduc- tion in the number of C. rogercresseyi 24 h post-infection and a delayed developmental rate of immunised fish. Further analysis of the results showed that the vaccine effect was due to the reduced settlement of larvae produced by lice on the immunized fish. The overall effect of the vac- cine in that experiment was 57% inhibition of infestation. A homologue to the my32 antigen from C. rogercresseyi is also present in L. salmonis.

Using this as a vaccine antigen in Atlantic salmon, however, did not significantly reduce the number of lice or lice fitness (F. Nilsen, R. Skern-Maurit- zen, C. Eichner and S. Dalvin, unpubl. data).

Despite these differences, studies of C. rogercresseyi point to the possibility of a future commercial sal- mon lice vaccine.

Recent developments in sequencing technology have led to a decrease in the sequencing costs and large increase in sequencing throughput. The sal- mon louse genome has been sequenced and assembled, and final annotation is in progress (Skern-Mauritzen et al.2012). This means that all potential treatment targets will be available, and an approach utilizing all this information is possi- ble. A preliminary count indicates about 22 000 genes occur in the salmon louse, although only a small fraction of these would be useful as vaccine antigens. A key challenge is therefore to identify the best candidates that could be used in a future commercial vaccine. Recently, Maritz-Olivier, Van Zyl & Stutzer (2012) proposed a functional genomics approach to identify vaccine candidates in cattle ticks. Their approach is based on several

steps of in silico evaluation of candidates prior to experimental verification of antigenicity and test- ing of recombinant antigens in trial vaccines.

Although the current knowledge of efficient pro- tective antigens against ectoparasites is limited, using all the genomic information in the initial analysis will be very helpful towards identifying a number of vaccine antigen candidates. During the last years, a set of tools and resources were estab- lished that facilitate the development of new con- trol tools for salmon lice. Efficient and accurate experimental facilities are crucial for the develop- ment of new treatment methods for salmon lice.

Hamre, Glover & Nilsen (2009) established spe- cific laboratory strains of L. salmonis along with procedures for maintaining and breeding salmon lice. A refined and more accurate set-up for con- ducting experiments with salmon lice was also recently developed (Hamre & Nilsen 2011). In addition, a set of molecular methods was estab- lished that will facilitate research leading to new treatment methods. Examples are lice-specific microarrays (Eichner et al. 2008; Sutherlandet al.

2012) and systemic RNA interference methods (Dalvin et al. 2009), which will be very useful in the future.

Classical bacterial and virus vaccines enhance the resistance to infection by limiting the capacity for pathogen replication within the host. For para- sites like ticks and salmon lice that do not prolif- erate on or in the host, the situation is quite different, and for these parasites, a vaccine that reduces the number of offspring has a direct effect on new infections. For the commercially available cattle tick vaccine, the overall effect of the vaccine is about a 90% reduction in the tick reproduction capacity. This includes increased tick mortality and a reduction in the number of eggs produced per female. The obvious question is whether a vaccine effect similar to that observed for cattle ticks is sufficient to make a difference for salmon lice. For example, a salmon louse vaccine that reduces the number of eggs/female by 50% will be comparable with a 50% reduction in the num- ber of female lice/fish. A vaccine like the cattle tick vaccine or a vaccine against salmon lice with a similar level of effect will not be a stand-alone tool in parasite control. Together with other anti- parasitic measures, however, the effect will be large. The reliance on chemotherapeutants will be reduced, and the lifetime for valuable medicine will be extended. If all farmed fish are vaccinated,

0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10 000 12 000

1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012

Number of wrasses

Figure 4 Catches of wrass in Norway for use as cleaner fish in salmon cages (Fiskeridirektoratet 2012).

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